Concurrent Design Optimization of Tether-Net System and Actions for Reliable Space-Debris Capture
Chen Zeng, Grant R. Hecht, Souma Chowdhury, Eleonora M. Botta
Abstract
Tether-nets deployed from a chaser spacecraft are a promising solution to capturing space debris. The success of the one-shot capture process depends on the net’s structural dynamic properties, attributed to its physical design, and on the ability to perform an optimal launch and closure subject to sensing and actuation uncertainties. Hence, this paper presents a reliability-based optimization framework to simultaneously optimize the net design and its launch and closing actions to minimize the system mass (case 1) or closing time (case 2) while preserving a specified probability of capture success. Success is assessed in terms of a capture quality index and the number of locked node pairs. Gaussian noise is used to model the uncertainties in the dynamics, state estimation, and actuation of the tether-net, which is propagated via Monte Carlo sampling. To account for uncertainties and ensure computational efficiency, given the cost of simulating the tether-net dynamics, Bayesian optimization is used to solve this problem. Optimization results show that the mission success rate in the presence of uncertainties has increased from 75% to over 98%, while the capture completion time has almost halved.